Drunkennesses [noun]
Definition of Drunkennesses:
inebriety
Sentence/Example of Drunkennesses:
The heat of drunkenness is the stumblingblock of the fool, lessening strength and causing wounds.
Woe to you that rise up early in the morning to follow drunkenness, and to drink in the evening, to be inflamed with wine.
There were many knots of men under the broad roof over the pavement, but in spite of the ubiquitous saloon no drunkenness.
His fraud would be still greater if he had designedly caused the drunkenness of the other.
A thirst drowned in drunkenness'; F. 'C'est la soif qui tous jors est ivre.'
Another cause for divorce, quite generally recognized, is habitual drunkenness.
They are hideous and terrible paintings of drunkenness, but without the morality of Hogarth.
It came to Lowell in a flash that Bill's arrogance sprang from something deeper than mere conceit or drunkenness.
Then, one night Bud dreamed again of Marie, and awoke with an insistent craving for the oblivion of drunkenness.
That he tolerated drunkenness in Bud now would have been rather surprising to any one who knew Cash well.